A13 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM EASTERN OREGON ECONOMIC SUMMIT WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2022 At the Pheasant, a candidate meets supporters the Port of Morrow and other activity in Eastern Oregon. The Eastern Oregon Eco- She added she has stood with nomic Summit brought some Eastern Oregon legislators on of the state’s biggest political their interests. figures to Hermiston. One of “I have had a real relation- those individuals, gubernatorial ship with Eastern Oregon,” candidate Betsy Johnson, visited she said. supporters at The Pheasant Blue Having flown into town, she Collar Bar & Grill in Hermiston applauded recent improvements on Friday morning, June 17. to the Hermiston Municipal “Eastern Oregon is not, for Airport, calling it “one of the me, just a stop on a political most beautiful” fixed-base op- campaign,” she said. erators. Johnson, who is running for “And It’s nice to come out governor as an onto the ramp, unaffiliated can- and they know “The town didate, said she who we are. We comes to the re- looks fabulous. bought some gas gion regularly. to help out the ... There seems airport,” she said. She added she has advocated she to be a sense of likes She to said for, and pro- consider duced for, the herself “a regular possibility area a great deal. out here.” here.” Johnson, who Furthermore, was a member she said, “The — Betsy Johnson, of the Oregon town looks candidate for Oregon House of Repre- fabulous.” She governor, about sentatives from called it “clean,” Hermiston 2001 to 2005 and “attractive” and the Oregon Sen- “welcoming.” ate from 2005 to 2021, credited “There seems to be a sense of herself for promoting Eastern possibility here,” Johnson said. Oregon business. “Hill Meat (Co.) now has ba- LOCAL CONNECTIONS con available in the Portland When asked whether she metro market because I flew the knew Hermiston Mayor David director of the Department of Drotzmann, she replied em- Ag and the grocery industry out phatically that she did. and advocated for them to have “Hell yes, I know your shelf space,” she said. mayor,” she said. She added she has promoted She called him “a great Amer- air service, including drones, ican,” and she told, what she in Pendleton. Johnson further called, a “silly, little story.” boasted of her work to support Johnson has made her large a partnership between Blue eyeglasses a symbol of her gu- Mountain Community College bernatorial campaign. The and the Pendleton Round-Up, frames, however, “are damned- which trained veterinary assis- near impossible to find.” tants and technicians. According to Johnson, she According to Johnson, she spoke with the mayor, busi- has brought other legislators to nesspeople, the school super- the area to promote the work of intendent and other people a BY ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Erick Peterson/Hermiston Herald Betsy Johnson, gubernatorial candidate, holds up frames Friday, June 17, 2022, she said she has had for around 40 years. She said David Drotzmann, Hermiston’s mayor and an optometrist, gifted her with identical frames recently. Johnson was at The Pheasant Blue Collar Bar & Grill to meet supporters. month ago. During the conver- sation, she said, she mentioned her troubles finding eyeglass frames to the mayor. Soon after their talk, Drotzmann, an op- tometrist, sent her frames from some “secret stash someplace,” she said. “I now have extras made up, and I have one of them made into sunglasses,” she said. “He couldn’t have given me anything that I would have welcomed more, because they are impossi- ble to find.” She said she was “over the moon.” GOALS AS GOVERNOR AND GETTING ON THE BALLOT Continuing her talk, she said she wants to make more local contacts, especially if elected governor, so she could further help the area and the entire state. Oregon’s business inter- ests, she said, need help. She stated they need to be pro- tected from excessive taxa- tion and regulation. “I’m talking to too many Or- egonians who are saying, ‘We can’t stay here. Permitting is too difficult,’” she said. Johnson added the state needs to promote business, keeping the momentum of suc- cesses. Johnson was at The Pheas- ant in part to add signatures to put her name on the November ballot. She said she has until mid-August to obtain roughly 25,000 signatures. “We will get many more than that,” she said. A representative from John- son’s campaign stated it col- lected more than 100 signa- tures in visits to Hermiston and Pendleton. Meanwhile, many more signatures from other Or- egonians were inundating John- son’s office. “We know we’re over 5,000. We’re not sure how close we are to 10,000,” the campaign repre- sentative said. HIV isn’t just a big city issue. More than half of Oregonians with HIV live outside of Portland, often in suburbs and small towns like this one. Good neighbors chip in to get the job done. And we’ve got work to do on HIV prevention. People in rural Oregon are more likely to get a late-stage diagnosis, and a lack of HIV treatment may harm your health, or your partner’s. Detected early, HIV is more easily managed and you can live a long, healthy life. Getting tested is a sign of strength, not weakness. 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